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Sharing the Load: Human-Robot Team Lifting Using Muscle Activity

Joseph DelPreto, Daniela Rus

Year
2019
Citations
62

Abstract

Seamless communication of desired motions and goals is essential for enabling effective physical human-robot collaboration. In such cases, muscle activity measured via surface electromyography (EMG) can provide insight into a person's intentions while minimally distracting from the task. The presented system uses two muscle signals to create a control framework for team lifting tasks in which a human and robot lift an object together. A continuous setpoint algorithm uses biceps activity to estimate changes in the user's hand height, and also allows the user to explicitly adjust the robot by stiffening or relaxing their arm. In addition to this pipeline, a neural network trained only on previous users classifies biceps and triceps activity to detect up or down gestures on a rolling basis; this enables finer control over the robot and expands the feasible workspace. The resulting system is evaluated by 10 untrained subjects performing a variety of team lifting and assembly tasks with rigid and flexible objects.

Keywords

Computer scienceRobotWorkspaceElectromyographySetpointTask (project management)Human–robot interactionBicepsArtificial intelligenceHuman–computer interaction

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